On-orbit performance of the Gaia CCDs at L2
C. Crowley, R. Kohley, N.C. Hambly, M. Davidson, A. Abreu, F. van, Leeuwen, C. Fabricius, G. Seabroke, J.H.J. de Bruijne, A. Short, L., Lindegren, A.G.A. Brown, G. Sarri, P. Gare, T. Prusti, T. Prod'homme, A., Mora, J. Martin-Fleitas, F. Raison, U. Lammers, W. O'Mullane

TL;DR
This paper reviews Gaia's on-orbit CCD performance, analyzing data over two years to assess radiation effects, charge transfer efficiency, and detector stability, ensuring high-precision star measurements for the mission.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of Gaia CCDs' on-orbit performance, including radiation effects and charge transfer efficiency over two years.
Findings
Radiation environment causes measurable charge transfer efficiency degradation.
End-of-mission CTI expected to be significantly less than pre-flight predictions.
Serial register traps are mainly due to manufacturing, with minor radiation impact.
Abstract
The European Space Agency's Gaia satellite was launched into orbit around L2 in December 2013 with a payload containing 106 large-format scientific CCDs. The primary goal of the mission is to repeatedly obtain high-precision astrometric and photometric measurements of one thousand million stars over the course of five years. The scientific value of the down-linked data, and the operation of the onboard autonomous detection chain, relies on the high performance of the detectors. As Gaia slowly rotates and scans the sky, the CCDs are continuously operated in a mode where the line clock rate and the satellite rotation spin-rate are in synchronisation. Nominal mission operations began in July 2014 and the first data release is being prepared for release at the end of Summer 2016. In this paper we present an overview of the focal plane, the detector system, and strategies for on-orbit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Calibration and Measurement Techniques
